Page Contents
Course Mode Considerations
The decision to create and teach a fully online or hybrid course depends on several different factors. While there is some research that suggests student retention may be higher in hybrid courses (Dzuiban & Moskal), whether or not to create an online or hybrid course should be contingent upon the availability of resources and the learning outcomes to be met for each department.
The following are some advantages and disadvantages of fully online or hybrid courses:
Fully Online Courses
Advantages | Disadvantages |
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Hybrid Courses
Advantages | Disadvantages |
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Course Development Timeline
The process to develop a new online or hybrid course for instructors new to teaching online takes about a year. The actual development and design of the course is approximately 300 hours. The time frame for creating a course depends on the amount of time it takes for instructors to train and whether or not the course will need revisions during the Curriculum and Instruction (C&I) Committee approval process. A new distance education course will be taught in the first full semester after it has been approved and cleared to teach by the Distance Education Department, with the exception of courses approved in Spring 2013, which will be taught in Summer 2014.
The job of the Distance Education Department is to advise and guide faculty during the course development process to make certain that each new course meets all PCC standards for best practices.
Sample Timeline (Fall C&I Cycle)
*Note: Distance Education policy and timeline pending.
Course Development Process
The more detailed steps for developing a new distance education course are as follows. For specific C&I information, see the FALL 2012 C&I Committee Deadlines & Meeting Dates. (SPRING 2013 dates coming soon.)
FALL |
C&I Curriculum Training |
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Faculty Assigned to Cohorts |
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C&I Proposal Feedback |
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DE FORM D Consultation |
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DE FORM D Approval |
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C&I Committee Review |
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C&I Proposal Consideration & Voting |
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Course Development
SPRING/SUMMER |
Create Course in LMS |
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Course Goes Live |
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Model Courses
Title 5 requirements for distance education course quality state that all online and hybrid courses must undergo a separate review process. What this means is that in any given semester, face-to-face courses cannot simply be transferred to the LMS to teach online section(s). Every distance education course must have a supplemental Form D on file describing ways in which the instructor will engage in regular effective contact and provisions for built-in accommodations for accessibility.
An additional measure to guarantee course quality is the creation of Model Courses.
Model Courses: |
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At present the College will focus on developing Model Courses for AA, transfer & certificate pathways.
Form D
Form D is a supplemental document detailing the distance education component of a course and undergoes a separate C&I Committee approval process (Title 5, Section 55206). Before any online or hybrid course can be taught at PCC there should be an officially approved Form D on file. It is recommended that a full-time faculty member be in charge of creating and filing Form D.
Purpose of Form D
The purpose of Form D is to confirm that the course meets Federal, State, WASC and PCC quality indicators and accessibility requirements. Each Form D should determine how the goals and objectives of the course will be met, confirm methods of instruction and assessment that illustrate best practices in online learning and academic integrity, and provide for regular means of ongoing course evaluation. Faculty must demonstrate that they understand how to incorporate best practices for regular effective contact and that they are able to create a course that meets requirements for accessibility.
Policies Related to Form D
Form D is a requirement for all Distance Education courses. There are two main regulations that govern the implementation of Form D.
Title 5 | What this means @ PCC |
In August 1999, the Chancellor’s Office began requiring that each DE course and its associated materials and resources be reviewed and revised, as necessary, when the course undergoes curriculum review pursuant to Title 5, sections 55002 and 55206, every six years as part of the accreditation process.(“Distance Education Guidelines” 4) | All courses that have an online or hybrid form of course delivery must undergo periodic review for accreditation. This is to ensure that courses are up-to-date, employing the most current practices in distance education instructional design. Form D for Credit/Non-Credit courses at PCC must be reviewed every 5 years and for Career and Technical Education courses every 2 years. |
508 Compliance | What this means @ PCC |
Distance education resources must generally be designed to provide “built-in” accommodation (i.e., closed or open captioning, descriptive narration) and/or interface design/content layout, which is accessible to “industry standard” assistive computer technology in common use by persons with disabilities.Distance education courses, resources and materials must be designed and delivered in such a way that the level of communication and course-taking experience is the same for students with or without disabilities.(“Distance Education Accessibility Guidelines for Students with Disabilities” 12-13) | All students must have the same access to course materials and be able to participate fully and equally in course activities. Designing distance education courses requires understanding how to create a course that addresses the needs of disabled students before the course has even launched. Understanding this is a complex process, and it is necessary that each faculty member filing Form D contact the Distance Education Department for consultation about how accessibility is fully integrated into their course design. |
When to File Form D
If there is no Form D for the course, faculty must meet with their Division Dean to initiate the distance education course development process as listed above. It is highly recommended that creating and filing Form D be completed by a full-time faculty member. Once a faculty member has begun the development process, they need to contact the Distance Education Department for assistance in completing Form D.
- For a new Course of Record, follow the steps for the Course Development Process described above.
- For an existing Course of Record, the steps for filing or revising Form D are explained in the flowchart below.
How to File Form D
For instructors already familiar with Form D or who have completed a course plan, enter the information directly into WebCMS.
For instructors not familiar with Form D or have not already developed a course plan, follow the steps below.The worksheets in each step give examples of completed Form Ds and will help organize the information that needs to be included in order for the proposal to be approved.
[step number=”1″ ] | Read through the Form D Worksheet to get a feel for what you will have to enter into WebCMS. Fill in the course information. |
[step number=”2″ ] | Determine if you will propose a fully online or hybrid course (or if there is a chance that it will be taught in both modalities). Check the appropriate box (or boxes). |
[step number=”3″ ] | To assist you with filling out the Regular Effective Contact Section on Form D, download & complete the Form D Interaction Worksheet. Use the information from the worksheet to fill in this section. |
[step number=”4″ ] | To assist you with filling out the Course Outline Section on Form D, review the examples listed, then download & complete the Form D Course Outline Worksheet. Use the information from the worksheet to complete this section. |
[step number=”5″ ] | Complete the Accessibility and Student Services Sections. |
[step number=”6″ ] | Send the completed Form D Worksheet to the DE Instructional Designer for review. Please do not copy the information from the Form D Worksheet to WebCMS until your Form D has been approved by the DE Department. |